PLoS Pathogens (Feb 2013)

Macrophage-expressed IFN-β contributes to apoptotic alveolar epithelial cell injury in severe influenza virus pneumonia.

  • Katrin Högner,
  • Thorsten Wolff,
  • Stephan Pleschka,
  • Stephanie Plog,
  • Achim D Gruber,
  • Ulrich Kalinke,
  • Hans-Dieter Walmrath,
  • Johannes Bodner,
  • Stefan Gattenlöhner,
  • Peter Lewe-Schlosser,
  • Mikhail Matrosovich,
  • Werner Seeger,
  • Juergen Lohmeyer,
  • Susanne Herold

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e1003188

Abstract

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Influenza viruses (IV) cause pneumonia in humans with progression to lung failure and fatal outcome. Dysregulated release of cytokines including type I interferons (IFNs) has been attributed a crucial role in immune-mediated pulmonary injury during severe IV infection. Using ex vivo and in vivo IV infection models, we demonstrate that alveolar macrophage (AM)-expressed IFN-β significantly contributes to IV-induced alveolar epithelial cell (AEC) injury by autocrine induction of the pro-apoptotic factor TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL). Of note, TRAIL was highly upregulated in and released from AM of patients with pandemic H1N1 IV-induced acute lung injury. Elucidating the cell-specific underlying signalling pathways revealed that IV infection induced IFN-β release in AM in a protein kinase R- (PKR-) and NF-κB-dependent way. Bone marrow chimeric mice lacking these signalling mediators in resident and lung-recruited AM and mice subjected to alveolar neutralization of IFN-β and TRAIL displayed reduced alveolar epithelial cell apoptosis and attenuated lung injury during severe IV pneumonia. Together, we demonstrate that macrophage-released type I IFNs, apart from their well-known anti-viral properties, contribute to IV-induced AEC damage and lung injury by autocrine induction of the pro-apoptotic factor TRAIL. Our data suggest that therapeutic targeting of the macrophage IFN-β-TRAIL axis might represent a promising strategy to attenuate IV-induced acute lung injury.